"...and fifty thoujand pounds. / •!---
On Wednefday lad. died, at his feat of Oakley Grove, tht Right Hon. Henry Earl Bathurst, formerly Lord High Chancellor of England. ‘ He is fucceeded in his title by his ... ^ killed. Tins report ts • juit brought to me by Captain Ogle, one of my Aide-de-Camps, who was present.
In juftice to the legiibture of St. Chriitopher’s, with Prefident Stanley at their head ... to Plywdath, wasljft a 2d July it Sentenced to death fourteen perfons—-(evenf011 June on poidheft.
of thefe fentences were confirmed by the Revolutionary ,** T . ^yten’ ^attt. ^c» Scotland to Barcelona, with
M ... of the richeft private individuals in France, fuffered death on the 10th inftânt.. with his whole family, and 14 others. Legrfjt..."

"...at to hundred and fifty On laft died at his feat of Oakley Grove the Right Hon HENRY Earl BATHURST Formerly Loul High Chancellor of England He is in his title by his fon Lord Prices of Hops this day ... into the water and fled with equal precipitation by land A cor- poral and eight privates of our light infantry are wounded but not one killed This report is juli bi ought to me by Captain one of my THE EDINBURGH ... was elected than it proceeded to functions On ad July it to death S E R for 1794 The Jong Hans from to and the Cornelia de Jong from Dort Barcelona arc taken and carried into Calais De Elizabeth from to frif
..."

About Henry Bathurst, 2nd Earl

The Earl Bathurst. Henry Bathurst, 2nd Earl Bathurst PC, KC (20 May 1714 – 6 August 1794), known as the Lord Apsley from 1771 to 1775, was a British lawyer and politician. He was Lord Chancellor of Great Britain from 1771 to 1778.

Background and education

Bathurst was the eldest son of Allen Bathurst, 1st Earl Bathurst, and his wife Catherine (née Apsley). Educated at Balliol College, Oxford, he was called to the Bar, Lincoln's Inn, in 1736, and became a King's Counsel in 1745.

Political and judicial career

In April 1735 he had been elected member of parliament for Cirencester, and was rewarded for his opposition to the government by being made solicitor-general and then attorney-general to Frederick, Prince of Wales. Resigning his seat in parliament in April 1754 he was made a judge of the Court of Common Pleas in the following month. He was admitted to the Privy Council and appointed Lord High Chancellor in January 1771, when he was raised to the peerage as Lord Apsley, Baron of Apsley, in the County of Sussex. Having succeeded his father as second Earl Bathurst in September 1775, he resigned his office somewhat unwillingly in July 1778 to enable Lord Thurlow to join the cabinet of Lord North. In November 1779 he was appointed Lord President of the Council, and left office with North in March 1782.

Family

Lord Bathurst married firstly Anne James in 1754. After her death in 1758 he married secondly Tryphena, daughter of Thomas Scawen, in 1759. He died at Oakley Grove near Cirencester on 6 August 1794, aged 80, and was succeeded in the earldom by his son from his second marriage, Henry. Lady Bathurst died in 1807. Apsley House, in Hyde Park, known as "Number One London", was built for him by Robert Adam. It was sold in 1807 to the first Marquess of Wellesley, who sold it in 1817 to his famous brother, Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington.